One Line Review: The Trilogy ends with a blast. No bad things were found in the finale
Introduction
Netflixβs “Dark” is a show full of emotion, suspense, and mystery, full of hints of supernatural and family drama. You will never feel bored or overwhelmed, this is a guarantee given. The beauty of this show is that the suspense and mystery keep you fascinated until you finish watching it, yet you will still be eager for more, questioning, scratching your head.
The twists and turns are excellent and very intricate in the story. They are dramatic, but not stupid. Nothing is wasted in space, story, or dialogue. In the dark, you should know that every image, every conversation, and everything has a role.
Whatβs it all about?
It is a story about a child who goes missing and a man who comments suicide on the same day. Somehow they both are connected. The missing child goes back in time and becomes the man who committed suicide on the same day.
Thriller, Now with 25% Philosophy
In family drama and time travel, Dark also has a number of philosophies that can make you amazing and make you question your beliefs and sanity long after the show ends. The show deals primarily with issues of time and human origin and tends to place time in the same neighborhood as God’s time. Creating a world where there is no time to enslave our humans is one of the central themes of this show, and it is also a theme that it follows in a very religious way. Using fantasy, he takes a very different perspective or narrative in the television age, questioning the meaning of faith and family, blood and time. It involves questions about fate, destiny, and choice. Can you change your destiny? Can you really get rid of the shackles of time? Can you change your future? Do we really have free time?
Rich in family drama
As I have already said the show has very good character arcs. It is also very rich in family dramas. The show brings together the personal lives of four families. Their paths, future, present, and past are intricately intertwined to form a huge loop (so-called connection, I mean true connection). As the show progresses, questions about sacrifice, betrayal, and love become the focus; who is hiding something, and who is related to whom. How far will you go to save your family, save your loved ones? This is a question that is repeated over and over again, as a carefully crafted larger topic. Each family has its own possible human problems to deal with. From loss and grief to struggles with sexual desire and the past, treat all aspects consistently. At its core, the dark is mostly about family relationships spanning generations, about the tragedies and betrayals that have shaped them, about love and hurt, and ultimately brings everyone and everything together in a very complex web. If you find the family dynamics and dramas of “Once Upon a Time” and “Game of Thrones” difficult to understand, wait till you see “The Dark.”
Conclusion
Thatβs it. The Trilogy ends here. To conclude, you can say it was a pretty entertaining and confusing journey altogher. But most importantly, we all enjoyed it.